REVERSIBLE DESTINY DECLARATION OF THE RIGHT NOT TO DIE SECOND INTERNATIONAL ARAKAWA + GINS CONFERENCE April 4-6, 2008 Conference / Congress Department of English, University of Pennsylvania Slought Foundation, Philadelphia Sponsored by the School of Engineering, University of Pennsylvania
April 4-6, 2008 - Conference / Congress 2 of 6 PROJECT DESCRIPTION The University of Pennsylvania and Slought Foundation, Philadelphia, in partnership with the Architectural Body Research Foundation, New York, are pleased to announce Reversible Destiny - Declaration of the Right Not to Die, the Second International Arakawa + Gins: Architecture + Philosophy Conference/Congress. The conference will take place at Slought Foundation and the University of Pennsylvania from April 4-6, 2008. Thinkers from a wide variety of disciplines will come together to figure out how our species can achieve a reversible destiny, working to do so in the following areas: -- * BIOTOPOLOGY THE SCIENCE OF VIABILITY * TERMINOLOGICAL JUNCTIONS FOR LANDING SITE(S) o Landing Site/Directed Vagueness/Non-Conceptual Content o Landing Site/Holding Site/Reaching-For Site/Social Landing Site * LANDING SITE(S) USED THERAPEUTICALLY * HOW NOT TO DIE BY MISTAKE * GROWING THE ARCHITECTURAL BODY o Anti-Aging Architectural Procedures o Architectural Procedures for Organisms that Person Children in Particular Since 1963, artists-architects-poets Arakawa and Madeline Gins have worked in collaboration to produce visionary, boundary-defying art and architecture. Their seminal work, The Mechanism of Meaning, has been exhibited widely throughout the world. A sequel to that, To Not To Die, appeared in 1987. Gins and Arakawa have exhibited jointly throughout Europe, Japan, and the United States. Their exhibition, "Site of Reversible Destiny," was on view at the Guggenheim Museum Soho in December 1997 and won the College Art Association's Exhibition of the Year award. Arakawa's large-scale paintings are in the permanent collections of museums throughout the world. Gin's published works include the avant-garde classic, What the President Will Say and Do!!, and an innovative arthistorical novel, Helen Keller or Arakawa. In 1987, as a means of financing the design and construction of works of procedural architecture that draw on The Mechanism of Meaning, extending its theoretical implications into the environment, Arakawa and Gins founded the Architectural Body Research Foundation. The Foundation actively collaborates with leading practitioners in a wide-range of disciplines including, but not limited to, experimental biology, neuroscience, quantum physics, experimental phenomenology, and medicine. Architectural projects have included residences (Reversible Destiny Houses - Mitaka; Bioscleave House - East Hampton, Long Island; Shidami Resource Recycling Model House), parks (Site of Reversible Destiny - Yoro) and plans for housing complexes and neighborhoods (Isle of Reversible Destiny - Venice and Isle of Reversible Destiny-Fukuoka, Sensorium City, Tokyo).
April 4-6, 2008 - Conference / Congress 3 of 6 CONFERENCE / CONGRESS VENUES Slought Foundation 4017 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104 Tel. +1.215.701.4627 Email. info@slought.org School of Engineering, University of Pennsylvania Berger Auditorium, Skirkanich Hall 210 South 33 rd Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104 (between Walnut and Spruce Streets) CONFERENCE SCHEDULE Friday April 4 th, 2008 (at Slought Foundation) 6:30pm: 7:00pm 8:30pm: 8:30pm 9:15pm: Opening of Reading Room Organized / initiated by Jondi Keane, Alan Prohm, Shaun Gallagher, and Theo Lotz Keynote Address by Dorothea Olkowski Followed by public conversation with Jean-Michel Rabaté, Aaron Levy, Attendees Session 1: How Not to Die by Mistake 1. Costica Bradatan 15 minutes 2. Trish Glazebrook 15 minutes 15 minutes
April 4-6, 2008 - Conference / Congress 4 of 6 Saturday, April 5 th, 2008 (Berger Auditorium, School of Engineering, UPenn) 10:30am 12:45pm: Session 2: Landing Sites Panel 1. Landing Site(s) Used Therapeutically 1. Jondi Keane 10 minutes 2. Blair Solovy 15 minutes 3. Lissa Wolsak 10 minutes 4. Alan Prohm 05 minutes Panel 2. Terminological Junctions for Landing Site(s) 1. Alan Prohm 10 minutes 2. George Quasha + Chuck Stein 15 minutes 3. Don Ihde 15 minutes 4. Evan Selinger 10 minutes 5. Shaughan Lavine 15 minutes 30 minutes 12:45pm 2:00pm: 2:00pm 4:30pm: LUNCH Session 3: How Not to Die by Mistake Panel 1. 1. Miles Orvell 10 minutes 2. James Sherry 15 minutes 3. Scott Faber M.D. 10 minutes 4. Alastair Noble 10 minutes Session 4: Growing the Architectural Body Panel 1. Yuma 1. Gordon Bearn 10 minutes 2. Bobby + June George 10 minutes 3. Peter van Eerden 10 minutes 30 minutes 4:30pm 6:30pm: RECESS Saturday, April 5 th, 2008 (Continued; at Slought Foundation) 6:30pm 6:45pm: 6:45pm 7:45pm: 8:00pm: Presentation/Costumes by Kathy Bruce Performance by Daria Fain DINNER
April 4-6, 2008 - Conference / Congress 5 of 6 Sunday, April 6 th, 2008 (Berger Auditorium, School of Engineering, UPenn) 10:30am 12:45pm: Session 5: Biotopology -- The Science of Viability Panel 1. 1. Andrew Levy 10 minutes 2. Martin Rosenberg 10 minutes 3. Reuben Baron 10 minutes Panel 2. 4. Klaus Benesch 10 minutes 5. Shaun Gallagher 10 minutes 6. Stanley Shostak 20 minutes Panel 3. 7. Don Byrd 10 minutes 8. Marie-Dominique Garnier 10 minutes 9. Robert Kocik 10 minutes 35 minutes 12:45pm 1:00 pm: 1:00pm 2:00pm: BREAK Session 6: Growing the Architectural Body Panel 1. Anti-aging Project 1. Joan Baron 10 minutes 2. Russell Hughes 10 minutes 3. Marta Keane 10 minutes Panel 2. Center for Studying How Not to Die 1. Ann Harithas + Jim Harithas 10 minutes 20 minutes
April 4-6, 2008 - Conference / Congress 6 of 6 Conference/Congress Headquarters: Slought Foundation 4017 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104 Tel. 215.701.4627 Public Transportation and Parking: Slought Foundation is a storefront space at 4017 Walnut Street and an easy walk from SEPTA and AMTRAK lines. The main train station for the city, which operates both as a local and regional transportation hub, is located at 30 th and Market Streets, roughly 5 blocks away from the University of Pennsylvania, and 12 blocks away from Slought Foundation. Those coming by the P2P Circulator bus from Penn Station NYC will also be dropped off at the station upon arrival in Philadelphia. If you prefer to travel by cab, the fare from the station to the conference locations will be approximately $5 dollars. Slought Foundation is located in a storefront space, adjacent to Metropolitan Bakery and the Freshgrocer supermarket and parking garage, and opposite the Bridge Cinema De Lux. Secure above-ground parking is available for a fee adjacent to the facility. Free and metered street parking is available on Walnut and surrounding streets if you are driving to the conference. For public transportation by bus or subway to Slought Foundation from center city Philadelphia, including those staying at Club Quarters, take city bus #21 West to 40th and Walnut Street. Or, take the "L / Blue Line" train West to 40th and Market Street from 30th Street Amtrak Station or Center City Philadelphia and walk two blocks south.